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I. <br />t <br />% <br />■ <br />h <br />!• • •( <br />r <br />i^•» <br />the intended purpose is connection to a public water, such as <br />boat slips, canals, lagoons, and harbors, must be controlled by <br />local shoreland controls. Permission for excavations may be <br />given only after the commissioner has approved the proposed <br />connection to public waters. <br />Subp. 5. Placement and design of roads, driveways, and <br />parking areas. Public and private roads, driveways, and parking <br />areas must be designed to take advantage of natural vegetation <br />and topography to achieve maximum screening from view from <br />public waters. They must be designed and constructed to <br />minimize and control erosion to public waters consistent with <br />the field office technical guides of the local soil and water <br />conservation district, or other applicable technical materials. <br />A. Roads, driveways, and parking areas must meet <br />structure setbacks and must not be placed within bluff and shore <br />impact zones, when other reasonable and feasible placement <br />alternatives exist. If no alternatives exist, they may be <br />placed within these areas, and must be designed to minimize <br />adverse impacts. <br />B. Public and private watercraft access ramps, <br />approach roads, and access-related parking areas may be placed <br />within shore Impact zones provided the vegetative screening and <br />erosion control conditions of this subpart are met. For private <br />facilities, the grading and filling provisions of subpart 4, <br />item B, must also be met. <br />Subp. 6. [Repealed, 13 SR 3029] <br />Subp. 7. Agricultural use standards. The agricultural use <br />standards for shoreland areas are contained in items A, B, C, <br />and 0. <br />A. The shore impact zone for parcels with permitted <br />agricultural land uses is equal to a line parallel to and 50 <br />feet from the ordinary high water level. <br />B. General cultivation farming, grazing, nurseries, <br />horticulture, truck farming, sod farming, and wild crop <br />harvesting are permitted uses if steep slopes and shore and <br />bluff impact zones are maintained in permanent vegetation or <br />operated under an approved conservation plan (Resource <br />Management Systems) consistent with the field office technical <br />guides of the local soil and water conservation districts or the <br />United States Soil Conservation Service. <br />C. Animal feedlots as defined by the Minnesota <br />Pollution Control Agency, where allowed by zoning district <br />designations, must be reviewed as conditional uses and must meet <br />the following standards: <br />(1) Mew feedlots must not be located in the <br />A-1.30